Kennedy sharp in debut as Yankees edge Devil Rays

Video

BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- Ian Kennedy became the eighth rookie
to start for the New York Yankees. And chances are he had the most
eventful debut out of anyone.

Kennedy pitched seven solid innings and Alex Rodriguez drove in
four runs as the Yankees posted a 9-6 victory over the Tampa Bay
Devil Rays on Saturday afternoon.

The Yankees (76-60), who won for the fourth time in five
contests, are two games in front of the Seattle Mariners (73-61)
for the wild card lead.

New York also is 4 1/2 games behind the Boston Red Sox (80-55)
in the American League East. The Red Sox face the Baltimore
Orioles later Saturday night.

They also had their second straight eventful victory. Saturday's
contest featured two bats confiscated and three errors by Tampa
Bay shortstop Josh Wilson and one by Rodriguez.

The drama began to unfold in the top of the second during rookie
third baseman Akinori Iwamura's second at-bat. With a 2-2
count, the Yankees had the umpires inspect the bat.

With runners on first and second, Yankees manager Joe Torre came
out to complain about Iwamura's bat, which has the end cut flat
instead of rounded, which is how most bats look.

"The rules state that it has to be smooth surface, and it just
looked like the bat was sort of sawed off," Torre said. "That's
the only thing I asked the umpire to check the bat. I
certainly wasn't out there to try the old gamesmanship stuff. I
was just curious. I've never seen that before.

"But I know if you get a bat made longer than the specifics and
make it heavier, make it more solid without being heavier. You
cut off the end of the bat, and that's what it looked like to
me."

Crew chief Dana DeMuth explained that he was just following the
rules.

"Manager Joe Torre contends that no manufacturer makes a bat
sawed off at the end like that, and he wanted to determine
whether it was a legal bat or an illegal bat," DeMuth said. "We
respected his request."

Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon conferred with all four umpires and
first base umpire Doug Eddings took Iwamura's bat, which likely
will be sent to the commissioner's office.

The bat is made by Nike and Iwamura has been using it all
season. The only time it was challenged was in Arizona on June
18, when Tim McClelland - who also umpired the famous "Pine Tar
Game" between the Yankees and Kansas City Royals in 1983 -
deemed it acceptable.

"I played the whole year with the same exact bat," Iwamura said
through an interpreter. "Not only against the Yankees, but
since the whole season started. Since then, I have kept using
the same exact bat until today."

"I had no idea what was going on," Kennedy said. "I'm glad he
did because I had too many pitches that inning. Jose had no
idea, Jeter had no idea either so we were kind of guessing.
When they took the bat away, we kind of figured because it's
flat on the end."

After the brief interruption, Iwamura struck out to end the
inning.

"It upset Aki at that particular moment because he didn't
understand what was going on," Maddon said. "He thought they
were accusing him of doing something illegal, which he was not.
I was trying to settle him down, continue his at-bat.

"'That's not the case, you are not cheating there is nothing
wrong. They are making these accusations. You get your bat
back (Sunday),' trying to do the interpreter things, but
nevertheless, I think it did bother him."

When Rodriguez came up for his second at-bat, Maddon did the
same thing since the rules entitled him to do.

"Joe Maddon contends that there is something inside the bat that
alters the distance of the ball," DeMuth said. "He also is
entitled to a challenge by rule so we also honored his request."

"Just retaliation," Maddon said. "There is nothing wrong with
Alex Rodriguez - he's a great player. Tit for tat entirely. I
said it's an illegal bat, I can't see inside it, but there might
be something inside that bat, I don't have X-ray vision. He's
got 45 home runs on September 1."

Rodriguez singled to left on the next pitch and the Yankees
scored twice in the inning to take the lead for good and then
added three in the fourth as Rodriguez had a two-run double that
gave New York a 7-2 advantage.

"I was hoping they would take my glove too after that pop up,"
Rodriguez said. "But he wanted the bat. I thought it was
pretty funny. I hope I get it back. I like that bat."

That was enough support for Kennedy (1-0), who, with the
exception of a 36-pitch second inning, was effective filling in
for struggling righthander Mike Mussina. Considered to be a
similar to the veteran righthander, Kennedy allowed a two-run
double to Wilson in the second and a solo shot to B.J. Upton in
the sixth.

"That first inning it felt like an outer body experience,"
Kennedy said. "My adrenaline was pumping so much. I tried
controlling it, but I'm glad I got through it."

After putting two runners on in the third with the game tied,
Kennedy got Delmon Young to hit into an inning-ending double
play and that began a stretch of eight straight retired batters
before Upton homered.

"After that (the third inning), it was back to normal," Kennedy
said. "I got a feel for my fastball. Location was a little
better along with my off-speed pitches."

Following Upton's home run, Kennedy retired the side in the
seventh and his final pitch was a strikeout of Wilson on a 94
miles-per-hour fastball. After the inning ended, Kennedy
received spirited handshakes from his teammates in the dugout
and a hug from pitching coach Ron Guidry in the dugout.

"It goes back to his poise," Torre said. "He just seemed very
prepared to pitch this game and again he didn't let the fact
that we scored two, and he gave two back real quick get in the
way."

The Yankees have used rookies to start 43 games this season.
Earlier this campaign, they employed Chase Wright, Tyler
Clippard and Matt DeSalvo to fill for some injured veterans.

But they have big expectations for Kennedy, whom Torre said will
likely start next week in Kansas City.

Kennedy mixed speeds well while working with catcher Jose Molina
as he struck out six and walked two. He threw 96 pitches but
only 34 in the final four frames.

"Innings are very valuable and he didn't look like he was
successful based on the fact that they hadn't seen him before,"
Torre said. "Because when you go to the seventh inning, they
have a pretty good idea of what you're doing but he still was
able to change location and change pitch speed."

The rookie righthander was staked to a 2-0 lead when Rodriguez
hit his 45th home run of the season and 509th of his career in
the first. But the slugger also contributed to Tampa Bay's
two-run second when he dropped a foul pop by Brendan Harris, who
would have been the second out.

Harris singled and, two batters later, Wilson lined a two-run
double. But the Yankees seized the lead for good in the third
thanks to Wilson, who also had three errors at shortstop,
including a throwing error that allowed Melky Cabrera to score
on Bobby Abreu's fielder's choice.

The Yankees added another run on Jason Giambi's RBI groundout
and scored three more in the fourth. Wilson booted a grounder
by Jose Molina that would have been the first out and Derek
Jeter and Abreu drew consecutive one-out walks.

Abreu's walk made it 5-3 and chased Tampa Bay starter Edwin
Jackson (4-13) from the contest. Jackson, who beat the Yankees
and Mussina here on July 20, lasted just 3 1/3 innings and was
charged with seven runs and five hits.

After Rodriguez's double, the Yankees added a pair in the
seventh off Juan Salas. Molina and Cabrera had consecutive RBI
singles to cap the scoring.

Those runs would turn out to be crucial as Luis Vizcaino allowed
three runs in the eighth, forcing Torre to use Rivera. The
future Hall-of-Famer recorded the final out of the eighth and
hurled a scoreless ninth for his 23rd save, ending the game with
a strikeout of Iwamura.

Rodriguez had a chance for the cycle but the Yankees removed him
as a precaution after he slid headfirst into second base. Torre
said he consulted with Rodriguez and the third baseman said
that the achievement was not that important.

ALAT NY YANKEES - SCORING UPDATESOLO HOME RUN BY B.J. UPTON (22) TO LEFT CENTER WITH 1 OUT IN THE 6TH OFF IAN KENNEDY.CURRENT SCORE: TAMPA BAY 3, NY YANKEES 7DUE UP FOR TAMPA BAY: D YOUNG (.293, 1-FOR-2)